... 122, 139 n.6 gesette 128 see also inland Ghent (Belgium) 104,133 Gillingham (Dorset) 123 Gittrup, nr Münster (Germany) 135 Gloucester (Glos.) 109 Goldcliff (Gwent) 32 Goltho (Lincs.) 61, 71 Grantham (Lincs.) 61 Grassington (Yorks.) ...
Fisiologiewerkboek
Some of these holdings remained free in 1249–50; others were becoming absorbed into customary tenancies but were still being described as ware acres.33 Nicholas son of Elias and William le hale, for instance, were free tenants of the ...
( puttockes ' red kite ' + rou ' rough ground ' , 1251 ) lay north of Hardwick Wood.43 Wood Green Common ( 1814 ) stood on the northern edge of Hardwick Wood , and Intercommon Furlong ( 1814 ) 44 – perhaps originally intercommonable ...
Owen-Crocker, G. 2007. 'British wives and slaves? Possible Romano-British techniques in 'women's work', in N. Higham, ed., Britons in Anglo-Saxon England. Woodbridge, Boydell and Brewer: 80–90. Owoc, M. A. 2005.
Mawer and Stenton 1926, 185; Hall 1987, 56, 59; Reaney 1943, 319. e-Sawyer S787; Hart 1966, 25–26; Mawer and Stenton 1926, 216. The latter suggested a date of 1022 for this name, but both Hart and Sawyer (see also e-Sawyer S595) agree ...
'Commonfield agriculture: The Andes and medieval England compared', in B. Campbell, Field Systems and Farming Systems in Late Medieval England. Ashgate, Variorum: V. Campbell, D. 2010. 'The Capitulare de Villis, the Brevium Exempla, ...
This book critically evaluates the prevailing idea that north-west European migration was central to the transformation from post-Roman to 'Anglo-Saxon' society in Britain, and explores the increasing evidence for more evolutionary change.
This book takes a critical approach to the dominant explanation for the transformation from post-Roman to 'Anglo-Saxon' society in Britain from the fifth to the eighth century: that change resulted from north-west European immigration into ...